Archive for the ‘Safety’ Category

Portable Pools: A Little Bit of Water Is Still a Lot of Danger

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Those little blow-up and portable wading pools are a great way to keep a small child cool in the hot summer months. But, according to a study published today in Pediatrics, the American Academy of Pediatrics has found that those pools put children age 5 and younger at risk for injury and death.

The statistics are grim, and it’s sometimes hard to believe that such a small amount of water can be so dangerous. However, the study noted that a child can drown in less than two feet of water!

Always, always, always watch your children. Here are some other tips to keep them safe:

 

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Teaching Your Child About Strangers Without Causing Fear

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by Mama Love

The safety of my kids is something I think about constantly, as I’m sure it’s certainly a topic on every parent’s mind. When I was growing up, you could play outside in the front yard without parental supervision and leave the doors unlocked every night without worrying about intruders. Unfortunately, times have changed significantly.

 

My three kids are still very young, so I know I have many years of worry ahead of me before my babies enter the real world to fend for themselves.

 

Even the thought of something bad happening to my kids used to drive me to fits of anxiety, and watching the numerous safety awareness clips in our baby DVDs only made me more aware that these things could happen. Soon enough, my anxiety began to rub off on my children.

 

Instead of dwelling on the anxiety, I took action and ordered The Safe Side video so my kids could learn what to do if a stranger ever approached them. We all liked the video because it was fun and upbeat, with lots of sound effects, bright colors and entertaining scenarios. It even had a catchy song about safety that we learned.

 

We spent a a lot of time watching The Safe Side video together and talking about different situations, approaching it comfortably and with confidence. The anxiety my kids experienced slowly eased.

 

According to KidPower.org, talking about “stranger danger” or focusing on scary stories can increase fear and anxiety for everyone. Instead, tell kids in a matter-of-fact way that you believe most people are good — and this means that most strangers are good, but a few have problems, and should be avoided.

 

KidPower.org also advises that young people learn best by actively participating. Practicing children’s personal safety skills increases their confidence and competence. It is important to do this in a way that is fun, but not scary.

 

Here are some educational safety tips that parents can use to help them be prepared, with out being paranoid.

 

1. Have a Child Safety/ID kit: A child safety or identification kit can include a fingerprint kit, hair DNA sample collection, dental records, an organized record of stats such as height, weight, color of eyes and hair and a recent color photo; you can also personalize and order an identification bracelet. ( download free template here)

 

2. Watch safety videos as a family: Safety videos can be very helpful in the first steps to educating your kids on how to identify a stranger and what to do if they get lost, or encounter an uncomfortable situation.

 

3. Talk to your child: Educate, inform and discuss. It’s never too early to start talking to your children about safety, strangers and how to be proactive instead of reactive. Knowledge creates confidence and could save a life. It’s important to create a dialogue or a question and answer time with your kids. Encourage them to ask questions, and listen carefully to their concerns.

 

4. Role play: Acting out different scenarios that could can be very helpful. For instance, what to do if they get lost in a store, incur bullying or are approached by a stranger.

5. Join Neighborhood Watch: Join your local neighborhood watch group, attend the meetings, and subscribe to their email list. This is a valuable way to learn about what is happening in your neighborhood and a great way to get to know your neighbors, if you don’t already.

 

6. Teach kids their name, address, phone number –Your child can escape, wander off or get lost in the blink of an eye; teaching them their full name, address and phone number can make all the difference should an emergency occur. If your child learns visually, write the telephone number down (in big numbers) and paste by the home phone. Practice repeating the information.

 

7. Calling 911 – Teaching your child to call 911 in an emergency is an important part of house safety rules. You’ve heard it on the news: “3-yr old saves mom with 911 song.” According to About.com, the basic tenets are the same for teaching kids and adults to call 911: Know when to call, make sure the operator knows where you are located and don’t hang up. Teaching kids to call 911 should start as soon as they can use with the phone.

 

In one of my favorite videos about safety, “Kids & Strangers,” comprehensive, real-life scenarios are reenacted. John Hall, creator of ‘Kid Escape’s Grip, Dip and Spin’ method, (featured on CNN, The Montel Williams Show and, The Oprah Winfrey Show), physically demonstrates real , practical scenarios for what a child should do if he or she is approached by a stranger or grabbed by a predator.

Children’s safety always comes first, so be vigilant, proactive and start the process of being prepared early, so you can lessen the fear and create confidence. And remember, being uninformed is the scariest of all scenarios.

 

Resources:

The Safe Side: http://www.thesafeside.com

Kids & Strangers: http://www.kidsandstrangers.org

Kid Power – http://www.kidpower.org/

John Hall’s “Kid Escape” (Grip, Dip and Spin) http://www.kidescape.org/

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Get Going on Childproofing Before Your Kid is on the Go

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By Double Duty Mama


When my first son was born, we didn’t rush around trying to childproof our home. We figured, since all he did was lie there gurgling and pooping, we had plenty of time to make our place safe for him — and from him. Then, one day, in what seemed like the blink of an eye, he was on the move.

And into everything!

The DVD player, the cat food, the pots and pans cabinet, the toilet … everything he’d been eyeing from the safety of our arms and the bouncy seat was suddenly his to explore.

The first weekend after he learned to crawl, we found ourselves in the Babies R Us childproofing aisle, feeling absolutely overwhelmed. What was all this stuff? Did we really need it all?

We decided on what we hoped was a practical approach to safety, and bought electric socket covers, door stoppers, locks for the cabinets and the toilet, two baby gates and rubber bumpers for the sharp edges of our entertainment unit. My husband spent the rest of the weekend, electric drill in hand, fastening and screwing tight anything that moved. We used one gate to block the hallway from the main living area and the other, a multi-piece play yard, was wrapped around the other end of the living room to separate it from the kitchen.

We plopped him inside what became known as the Baby Zone and felt assured.

For about five minutes.

Because that’s how long it took him to figure out that he could use his head as a battering ram to move the play yard gates and get to the pebble-sized, choking-hazard cat food.

When I was pregnant with our second son, we remodeled the kitchen. After, I thought through where to put things, and made sure that anything in reach of a crawler and a toddler was safe. So, the cleaning fluids were behind locks, but my sons could play with the plastic mixing bowls and containers all they wanted.

Considering how active and curious my boys seemed, we were pretty lucky that we never had any major safety scares. Like most busy parents, my husband and I tend to be lazy and easily lose patience with things like complicated toilet locks; but we knew it was important to remain vigilant for our kids’ safety. You can’t put them in a bubble, but there are certainly easy steps you can take to ensure they stay safe in the place where they should be the most secure — your home.

Here are some tips to keep your house safe for your little ones:

  • Take a new look at your house from your baby’s level. Clear all surfaces at or below your chest.
  • Remove rubber tips from door stops. The small pieces are a common cause of choking in babies.
  • Drape cloth diapers over the door top to keep baby from shutting his or her  fingers  (or other limbs) in the door.
  • Keep pillows and loose blankets out of the crib until your baby is a year old.
  • Small children can easily drown in a toilet; invest in a toilet latch.
  • When running bath water, turn off hot water first so if baby turns on the faucet he won’t be burned by leftover water.
  • Things that can fit through a toilet paper tube can cause a young child to choke. Keep small items and hard foods or candy out of sight and reach.

For more tips and information on how to keep your kids safe at home, visit the Home Safety Council.

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March is “Child Safety Month” at Ready. Set. Grow!

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Now that February’s focus on oral health is wrapped up, we’re tackling two important issues in March: grieving and child safety.

Death is a subject we seldom like to talk about, and it tends to enter our lives without warning. Whether the loss is a friend, family member or pet, death can be a very confusing and mystifying time for young children. In partnership with Sesame Street’s When Families Grieve” campaign, we’ll give you resources and strategies to support, educate and guide your child, and your family, through the healing process.

Keeping children safe from abuse and neglect is another First 5 LA goal, as outlined in our Strategic Plan. This month, we’ll deliver tips and advice on household safety, baby proofing and injury prevention, as well as resources and information on post-partum depression and mental health issues.

Keep your eyes on our blog, as well as our Facebook and Twitter pages, for daily tips, news and links to local and online and support.

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Lost and Found

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by Momanista

I was watching “Modern Family” the other night and even a rerun of that TV show cracks me up. It was the episode where the gay couple leaves their baby in a hotel elevator.

I was laughing at their freak out, but any parent I know, Mom or Dad, has had this happen at least once, or so they tell me. It tends to etch in your memory–the time you lost your child.

The first time I remember was at my son’s 2nd birthday party. We had a palm-to-palm hand-off system, and my husband had him. While packing up, he assumed I’d taken him. A football field away, our toddler wandered toward a busy street. Our teen nephews ran like track stars, screaming, and this so startled our boy that he stopped…at the curb. My husband had to drive alone for an hour to recover.

Maybe it’s more accurate to say that we lost track of our child, and momentarily. But the terror is no less deep.

You’d think we’d be scared straight.

Let’s see, there was the time I lost him at Target in the baby department. He was way too old to test drive those saucers that save your sanity, and his tennies prevented him from getting back out of the leg holes. Occupado. Yes!

I even let him scoot to the next aisle, where I could still hear him as I browsed.

The silence strikes you. It’s way too quiet….

And bolt I did. Next aisle, the next aisle, jogging now, hollering his name, louder, frantic head swivels. Then I found the empty walker, my son’s sneakers tossed to the side. Oh my God, someone pulled him out. He couldn’t think this up.

Not 30 seconds later, I charged toward a red-vested associate.

“My child is gone,” I said in muted hysteria.

Him: “Well now if you go over to customer-“

Me:  “No. You need to get on that radio now. Tell them to head to the door.”

Him: “But it will be—“

Me: “A kid just vanished, which would make it bad publicity for the store. I’ll meet them at the door.”

Now listen to this, because I did something right here. The associate radios, the call comes back in an instant, and the P.A. announces “Code —-“to the whole store. The staff knows the code. The doors seal shut, and nobody gets out with a child until the missing one’s found.

I somehow knew from news that you squander precious minutes wandering a vast square footage; it takes only seconds to pull a small child out of the store and drive away.  Only now that the doors were secured could we search aisle by aisle.

I kept telling myself that the vast majority of abductions are by someone known to the child. But who listens to themselves at a time like this? We’ve heard the warnings. Keep your child in sight. And I didn’t.

Three long minutes later, a clerk spotted my three-year-old against an upholstered display, kicking back, clueless. “Hi Mom!” he said, pleased with his new hideaway. It was quite close to the abandoned saucer. But store managers said I’d done the right thing.

Most people would learn from that ordeal. Then you go to an amusement park in peak season. Standing in a 20-minute line at Knott’s Berry Farm for a mother-son dinner, I finally get to order. As I wait for the food, I look down to find my 4-year-old no longer climbing the western handrails.

Nightfall amid the fake rocks of Ghost Town. I repeated my Target move and walked straight to a cowgirl with a nametag. She radioed then walked me to a nearby lost and found office, where my kid had been taken. I was furious yet proud, because as soon as he knew he was lost, my boy went to a uniformed security guard.

Now before you call authorities, consider the balance we parents strive for, the one that sometimes tips out of our favor. You want to give your child freedom to explore, discover, experience and yes, even fall down and get hurt. They learn cause and effect and physics (you climb out onto a weak branch that is lighter than you are, and you will crash down).

In these experiences and mistakes made, small predicaments solved, they are alive and learning. You hope they will be enchanted. Try to test and figure things out. This takes letting them take risks.

But it’s never easy, is it?

MissingKids.com suggests these steps:

  1. Obtain a detailed description of the child including clothing.
  2. Go to the nearest in-house telephone and page “Code Adam,” describing the child’s physical features and clothing. Designated employees are to immediately stop working and look for the child. Designated employees monitor front entrances to ensure the child does not leave the premises.
  3. If the child is not found within 10 minutes, call law enforcement.

Personally, I’d insist parking lot personnel start hunting and I’d call the police sooner.

For an English-Spanish parent guide for what to do in such situations:

http://www.missingkids.com/missingkids/servlet/PageServlet?LanguageCountry=en_US&PageId=244

For more on what to do if your child goes missing at home or elsewhere, as outlined in the Code Adam, named in honor of 6-year-old Adam Walsh:  http://www.missingkids.com/missingkids/servlet/PageServlet?LanguageCountry=en_US&PageId=244

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Swimming Lessons

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by Momanista

The perfume of my childhood summers evokes such happy, lazy days, filled with the aroma of barbecued burgers, smoky bonfires, lighter fluid, Hawaiian Tropic suntan oil and chlorine.

Even today, the smells of swimming pools make me nostalgic for carefree youth in which we, not our parents, were expected to fill the time. We called it boredom. I see now it was a gift.

For how many hours we kids spent swimming, I can’t remember either parent in the water with us.

I wish my son had quite that freedom. But I was determined to give him a better introduction to swimming than mine.  Family lore has it that one of my first dips in the inflatable wading pool involved actual snakes. My big brother, then probably nine, had caught them, in the nearby creek but forgot to alert our Mom of their new habitat.

Children being resilient, I was soon enough spending hours at Marco Polo and cannon-balling off the high dive. I wished for my infant boy to love the water like I did.

There was also a dark aspect. When I was little, my beloved younger cousin Deana, like a baby sister to me, had been bumped by her St. Bernard into the family’s backyard pool. Her grandmother had run inside for a thimble, and the phone rang. Five minutes later, toddler Deana was gone. Her legacy is that every child in my family took lessons early, many before they walked.

And so was the case with my baby.

We luck out in having an affordable city pool down the street. It is indoors, which isn’t my favorite, but in cold and scorching weather it is a blessing. And nobody has to be smothered in sun block.

Before he was walking, I toted my infant down to the pool. He was remarkably secure about floating on his back. He was also the only baby in the water. The pool was swarming with children—loud, screaming, shoving, jumping off the deck to throw waves of water into my baby’s face.

He just blinked and giggled. I was calm, he was calm. He didn’t seem to know fear, and was open to the splashing world.

A few years later, not so much.

The whole Mommy and Me class ended with a sigh. It was tolerated. Same pool. Same parents. But a sign of the water temp was the teachers wearing wetsuits.

Then came group lessons which, to me, were tedious at toddler age and taught playing more than swimming. That’s fine if it suits you, or you feel unprepared in the water, or enjoy racing home from work to be splashed in the face for a half hour by strangers.

Otherwise, you can do the whole floating, splashing and kicking thing on your own.

Given our family history, I went for the one-on-one. At a neighborhood swim school where the water was balmy warm, they knew what they were doing. It was about $15 per 15-minute lesson. But I had the peace of mind of seeing my son, still in swim diapers and jeans, bumped into the water but able to swim to the pool side.

A decent amount of my friends shuddered at the teachers dunking the tikes, could not take watching them scream furiously, or frightened, and give that look that says, have you forsaken me? The school’s view, which I shared, was that you can’t swim well with a dry face.

There were weeks of panic and dread. Bribery by Hot Wheels was committed by someone close to the case. It was enough reward to gut through initial fear for a 15-minute lesson.

“Look!”  I said, a bit too chirpy, pointing to a giant clock. “Five minutes are already gone!

My husband would say, it’s not worth this. Let’s take a break and revisit this. But I witnessed three-month-olds pollywog around, and I knew the tragedy of seeing a toddler survive without brain activity for years. It would not befall us.

To me, there was no better way to show that we can overcome fear. With swimming, you do one stroke after another, you do it or you sink. So you do it.

As a Mom, I learned unexpectedly about faith. My child would get past momentary panic and gain confidence in having done so. He would learn what he could do. He would be braver each time. And so would I.

Any time we faced some daunting task that seemed beyond our reach, we could remember swim lessons, and say, if you can learn to stay afloat, you can do anything.

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If you are looking for public pools in your area, check out our Top 10 Summer Splashes blog entry by Elise

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Swallowing Batteries: a Growing Risk for Kids

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by Brains and Things

At First 5 LA we get a lot of information about what is new in the world of kids – how to keep your child safe and topics like that. And rarely does a subject take me aback, but when a colleague sent me a WebMd article about the rise of kids swallowing batteries I had to take a minute and read the article twice. Batteries?? Yikes! Now that’s scary. According to the article batteries lodged in the esophagus can cause tissue tears, burning, and internal bleeding if in there for more than two hours.

I know that kids put anything and everything in their mouth, so, even though they’re scary, what’s so different about a battery, right? But the article pointed out that the rate of people eating the little “button” batteries has risen from 1 percent to 18 percent between 1990 and 2008, and almost the same rise for regular lithium batteries. That’s a big hike! So why is a child born in 2008 way more likely to eat a battery than a toddler born in the 90s? Essentially, Americans are just using more of them according to the article. Remotes, clocks, cameras – we use more of them, and they are all within a curious child’s reach.

So armed with this new knowledge parents, add a couple of minutes to your day to secure the batteries in your house so kids can’t eat them. My suggestion? Strong, kid proof, but not adult proof tape. You could also put pressure on manufacturers to make more secure battery compartments if you are into putting pressure on manufacturers. Happy securing!

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